Journal Article


A social researcher researching social researchers : lessons from feminist epistemologies

Abstract

Qualitative research literature discusses how power shapes the interview process and the resulting data and explores the epistemic basis for interview research theoretically. However, processes of negotiating epistemic authority in the interview situation, and in data analysis, are investigated less frequently. This paper draws on 34 interviews with social science academics interested in gender, feminist and queer studies in four English universities to reflect on the epistemological challenges of researching social researchers about their work. Through this, it contributes to explorations of how, in qualitative interviewing and data analysis, we can combine a critical reading of interview data with a commitment to respondents’ accounts of their realities. I argue that Black, anti-colonial, queer, feminist epistemological approaches can be well suited to navigate this challenge. I advocate for an epistemic reflexivity that acknowledges the fluidity of speaker positions while taking structural power relations, and their effects on epistemology, seriously.

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Authors

Schwoerer, Lili

Oxford Brookes departments

School of Law and Social Sciences

Dates

Year of publication: 2024
Date of RADAR deposit: 2024-11-11


Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License


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